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Formation of the Union Project Gutenberg's Formation of the Union, by Albert Bushnell Hart Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the header without written permission. Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. **Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** **eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** *****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!**** Title: Formation of the Union Author: Albert Bushnell Hart Release Date: October, 2004 [EBook #6767] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on January 25, 2003] Edition: 10 Language: English Character set encoding: ISO 8859-1 *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FORMATION OF THE UNION *** Produced by Anne Soulard, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. FORMATION OF THE UNION 1750-1829 BY ALBERT BUSHNELL HART, PH.D. To the Memory OF THOMAS H. LAMSON, _A GENEROUS FRIEND OF LEARNING._ PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. Formation of the Union 1 The second volume of the EPOCHS OF AMERICAN HISTORY aims to follow out the principles laid down for "THE COLONIES," the study of causes rather than of events, the development of the American nation out of scattered and inharmonious colonies. The throwing off of English control, the growth out of narrow political conditions, the struggle against foreign domination, and the extension of popular government, are all parts of the uninterrupted process of the Formation of the Union. So mighty a development can be treated only in its elements in this small volume. Much matter is thrown into graphic form in the maps; the Suggestions for Readers and Teachers, and the bibliographies at the heads of the chapters are meant to lead to more detailed accounts, both of events and of social and economic conditions. Although the book includes three serious wars, there is no military history in it. To the soldier, the movement of troops is a professional question of great significance; the layman needs to know, rather, what were the means, the character, and the spirit of the two combatants in each case, and why one succeeded where the other was defeated. To my colleague, Professor Edward Channing, I am indebted for many suggestions on the first four chapters. ALBERT BUSHNELL HART. CAMBRIDGE, July 1, 1892. PREFACE TO THE EIGHTH EDITION. During the five years since this volume of the Epochs of American History was first issued, the literature of the subject has made constant advances; and hence the Suggestions for Readers and Teachers and the bibliographies at the head of each chapter have been pruned, enlarged, and rewritten. The text has undergone fewer changes. The good-will of users of the book has pointed out some errors and inaccuracies, which have been corrected from time to time; and new light has in some cases dawned upon the author. I shall always be grateful for corrections of fact or of conclusions. ALBERT BUSHNELL HART CAMBRIDGE, July 1, 1897. SUGGESTIONS FOR READERS AND TEACHERS. Each of the volumes in the series is intended to be complete in itself, and to furnish an account of the period it covers sufficient for the general reader or student. Those who wish to supplement this book by additional reading or study will find useful the bibliographies at the heads of the chapters. For the use of teachers the following method is recommended. A chapter at a time may be given out to the class for their preliminary reading, or the paragraph numbers may be used in assigning lessons. From the references at the head of the chapter a report may then be prepared by one or more members of the class on each of the numbered sections included in that chapter; these reports may be filed, or may be read in class when the topic is reached in the more detailed exercises. Pupils take a singular interest in such work, and the details thus obtained will add a local color to the necessarily brief statements of the text. STUDENTS' REFERENCE LIBRARY. The following brief works will be found useful for reference and comparison, or for the preparation of topics. The set should cost not more than twelve dollars. Of these books, Lodge's Washington, Morse's Jefferson, and Schurz's Clay, read in succession, make up a brief narrative history of the whole period. 1. EDWARD CHANNING: _The United States of America, 1765-1865_. New York: Macmillan Co., 1896 Excellent survey of conditions and causes. Formation of the Union 2 2. ALEXANDER JOHNSTON: History of American Politics. 2d ed. New York: Holt, 1890 Lucid account of political events in brief space. 3, 4. HENRY CABOT LODGE: George Washington (_American Statesmen Series_). 2 vols. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1889 Covers the period 1732-1799. 5. JOHN T. MORSE, JR.: Thomas Jefferson (_American Statesmen Series_). Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1883 Covers the period 1750-1809. 6. CARL SCHURZ: Henry Clay, I. (_American Statesmen Series_). Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1887 Covers the period 1777-1833. 7. EDWARD STANWOOD: A History of Presidential Elections. 3d ed. revised. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1892 An account of the political events of each presidential campaign, with the platforms and a statement of the votes. 8. SIMON STERNE: Constitutional History and Political Development of the United States. 4th ed. revised. New York: Putnam's, 1888 An excellent brief summary of the development of the Constitution. 9. HERMANN VON HOLST: The Constitutional and Political History of the United States. Vol. I. _1750-1833_. State Sovereignty and Slavery. Chicago: Callaghan & Co., 1877 Not a consecutive history, but a philosophical analysis and discussion of the principal constitutional events. SCHOOL REFERENCE LIBRARY. The following works make up a convenient reference library of secondary works for study on the period of this volume. The books should cost not more than thirty-five dollars. 1-9. The brief works enumerated in the previous list. 10. EDWARD CHANNING and ALBERT BUSHNELL HART. Guide to the Study of American History. Boston: Ginn & Co., 1896 A classified bibliography, with suggestions as to methods. 11. 12. GEORGE TICKNOR CURTIS: Constitutional History of the United States from their Declaration of Independence to the Close of their Civil War. 2 vols. New York: Harpers, 1889-1896 Volume I. is a reprint of Curtis's earlier History of the Constitution, in two volumes, and covers the period 1774-1790. Chapters i vii. of Volume II. come down to about 1830. 13. RICHARD FROTHINGHAM: The Rise of the Republic of the United States. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1872 A careful study of the progress of independence, from 1750 to 1783. Indispensable. 14. SYDNEY HOWARD GAY: _James Madison (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1884. 15. JUDSON S. LANDON: The Constitutional History and Government of the United States. A Series of Lectures. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1889 The only recent brief constitutional history, except Sterne. 16. HENRY CABOT LODGE: _Alexander Hamilton (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1882. Chapters 3 17. JOHN T. MORSE, JR.: _John Adams (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1885. 18. JOHN T. MORSE, JR.: _John Adams (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1882. 19-21. JAMES SCHOULER: History of the United States of America under the Constitution. New ed. 5 vols. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1895 This is the only recent and complete history which systematically covers the whole period from 1783 to 1861. The style is very inelegant, but it is an excellent repository of facts. Vols. I III. (sold separately) cover the period 1783-1830. 22. WILLIAM MILLIGAN SLOANE: _The French War and the Revolution (American History Series)_. New York: Scribners, 1893 Covers the period 1700-1783. 23. FRANCIS A. WALKER: _The Making of the Nation (American History Series)_. New York: Scribners, 1894 Covers the period 1783-1817. LARGER REFERENCE LIBRARY. For school use or for extended private reading, a larger collection of the standard works on the period 1750-1829 is necessary. The following books ought to cost about a hundred and fifty dollars. Many may be had at secondhand through dealers, or by advertising in the _Publishers' Weekly_. Additional titles may be found in the bibliographies at the heads of the chapters, and through the formal bibliographies, such as Foster's References to Presidential Administrations, Winsor's Narrative and Critical History, Bowker and Iles's _Reader's Guide_, and Channing and Hart's Guide. 1-23. The books enumerated in the two lists above. 24-32. HENRY ADAMS: History of the United States of America. 9 vols. New York: Scribners, 1889-1891 Period, 1801-1817. Divided into four sets, for the first and second administrations of Jefferson and of Madison; each set obtainable separately. The best history of the period. 33. HENRY ADAMS: _John Randolph (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1882. 34-43. GEORGE BANCROFT: _History of the United States, from the Discovery of the American Continent_. 10 vols. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1834- 1874 Vols. IV X. cover the period 1748-1782. Of the third edition, or "author's last revision," in six volumes (New York: Appleton, 1883-1885), Vols. III VI. cover the period 1763-1789. The work is rhetorical and lacks unity, but is valuable for facts. 44. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT and SYDNEY HOWARD GAY: A Popular History of the United States. 4 vols. New York: Scribners, 1876-1881 Entirely the work of Mr. Gay. Well written and well illustrated. 45,46. JOHN FISKE: The American Revolution. 2 vols. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1891. 47. JOHN FISKE: The Critical Period of American History, 1783-1789. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1888 Remarkable narrative style. 48. DANIEL C. GILMAN: _James Monroe (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1883. Chapters 4 49-52. RICHARD HILDRETH: The History of the United States of America. Two series, each 3 vols. New York: Harpers, 1849-1856 (also later editions from the same plates) Vols. II VI. cover the period 1750-1821. Very full and accurate, but without foot-notes. Federalist standpoint. 53. JAMES K. HOSMER: _Samuel Adams (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1885. 54-57. JOHN BACH MCMASTER: _A History of the People of the United States, from the Revolution to the Civil War_. 4 vols. New York: Appleton, 1883-1895 The four volumes published cover the period 1784-1820. The point of view in the first volume is that of social history; in later volumes there is more political discussion. 58. JOHN T. MORSE, JR.: _Benjamin Franklin (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1889. 59, 60. FRANCIS PARKMAN: Montcalm and Wolfe. 2 vols. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1885. 61. GEORGE PELLEW: _John Jay (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1890. 62, 63. TIMOTHY PITKIN: _A Political and Civil History of the United States of America, from the Year 1763 to the Close of the Administration of President Washington, in March, 1797_. 2 vols. New Haven: Howe and Durrie & Peck, 1828 An old book, but well written, and suggestive as to economic and social conditions. 64. THEODORE ROOSEVELT:_ Gouverneur Morris (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1888. 65. JOHN AUSTIN STEVENS: _Albert Gallatin (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1884. 66-69. GEORGE TUCKER: _The History of the United States, from their Colonization to the End of the Twenty-Sixth Congress, in 1841_. 4 vols. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1856-1857 Practically begins in 1774. Written from a Southern standpoint. 70. MOSES COIT TYLER: _Patrick Henry (American Statesmen Series)_. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1887. 71-78. JUSTIN WINSOR: Narrative and Critical History of America. 8 vols. Boston & New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1886-1889 Vol. VI. And part of Vol. VII. cover the period 1750-1789. The rest of Vol. VII. covers the period 1789-1830. Remarkable for its learning and its bibliography, but not a consecutive history. SOURCES. In the above collections are not included the sources which are necessary for proper school and college work. References will be found in the bibliographies preceding each chapter below, and through the other bibliographies there cited. CONTENTS. Chapters 5 CHAPTER I. THE AMERICANS IN 1750. 1. References 2. Colonial geography 3. The people and their distribution 4. Inherited institutions 5. Colonial development of English institutions 6. Local government in the colonies 7. Colonial government 8. English control of the colonies 9. Social and economic conditions 10. Colonial slavery. CHAPTER II. EXPULSION OF THE FRENCH (1750-1763). 11. References 12. Rival claims in North America (1690-1754) 13. Collisions on the frontier (1749-1754) 14. The strength of the parties (1754) 15. Congress of Albany (1754) 16. Military operations (1755- 1757) 17. The conquest of Canada (1758-1760) 18. Geographical results of the war (1763) 19. The colonies during the war (1754-1763) 20. Political effects of the war (1763). CHAPTER III. CAUSES OF THE REVOLUTION (1763-1775). 21. References 22. Condition of the British Empire (1763) 23. New schemes of colonial regulation (1763) 24. Writs of Assistance (1761- 1764) 25. The Stamp Act (1763-1765) 26. The Stamp Act Congress (1765) 27. Revenue acts (1767) 28. Colonial protests and repeal (1767-1770) 29. Spirit of violence in the colonies (1770-1773) 30. Coercive acts of 1774 31. The First Continental Congress (1774) 32. Outbreak of hostilities (1775) 33. Justification of the Revolution. CHAPTER IV. UNION AND INDEPENDENCE (1775-1783). 34. References 35. The strength of the combatants (1775) 36. The Second Continental Congress (1775) 37. The national government formed (1775) 38. Independence declared (1776) 39. New State governments formed (1775- 1777) 40. The first period of the war (1775-1778) 41. Foreign relations (1776-1780) 42. The war ended (1778-1782) 43. Finances of the Revolution (1775-1783) 44. Internal difficulties (1775-1782) 45. Formation of a Constitution (1776-1781) 46. Peace negotiated (1781-1783) 47. Political effects of the war (1775-1783). CHAPTER V. THE CONFEDERATION (1781-1788). 48. References 49. The United States in 1781 50. Form of the government (1781-1788) 51. Disbandment of the army (1783) 52. Territorial settlement with the States (1781-1802) 53. Finances (1781-1788) 54. Disorders in the States (1781-1788) 55. Slavery (1777-1788) 56. Foreign relations and commerce (1781-1788) 57. Disintegration of the Union (1786, 1787) 58. Reorganization attempted (1781-1787). CHAPTER VI. THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION (1787-1789). 59. References 60. The Federal Convention assembled (1787) 61. Difficulties of the convention (1787) 62. Sources of the Constitution 63. The great compromises (1787) 64. Details of the Constitution (1787) 65. Difficulties of ratification (1787, 1788) 66. State conventions (1787, 1788) 67. Expiration of the Confederation (1788) 68. Was the Constitution a CHAPTER I. 6 compact? CHAPTER VII. ORGANIZATION OF THE GOVERNMENT (1789-1793). 69. References 70. Geography of the United States in 1789 71. The people of the United States in 1789 72. Political methods in 1789 73. Organization of Congress (1789) 74. Organization of the Executive (1789, 1790) 75. Organization of the courts (1789-1793) 76. Revenue and protection (1789, 1790) 77. National and State debts (1789, 1790) 78. United States Bank (1791, 1792) 79. Slavery questions (1789-1798) 80. The success of the new government (1789-1792). CHAPTER VIII. FEDERAL SUPREMACY (1793-1801). 81. References 82. Formation of political parties (1792-1794) 83. War between France and England (1793) 84. American neutrality (1793) 85. The Jay Treaty (1794-1796) 86. The Whiskey Rebellion (1794) 87. Election of John Adams (1796) 88. Breach with France (1795-1798) 89. Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) 90. Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions (1798-1800) 91. Election of 1800, 1801 92. Causes of the fall of the Federalists. CHAPTER IX. REPUBLICAN SUPREMACY (1801-1809). 93. References 94. The political revolution of 1801 95. Jefferson's civil service (1801-1803) 96. Attack on the judiciary (1801-1805) 97. The policy of retrenchment (1801-1809) 98. Barbary Wars (1801-1806) 99. Annexation of Louisiana (1803) 100. Federal schemes of disunion (1803- 1809) 101. The Burr conspiracy (1806, 1807) 102. Aggressions on neutral trade (1803-1807) 103. Policy of non resistance (1805-1807) 104. The embargo (1807, 1808) 105. Repeal of the embargo (1809). CHAPTER X. THE UNION IN DANGER (1809-1815) 106. References 107. Non intercourse laws (1809, 1810) 108. Fruitless negotiations (1809-1811) 109. The war party (1811) 110. Strength of the combatants (1812) 111. War on the northern frontier (1812, 1813) 112. Naval war (1812-1815) 113. Disastrous campaign of 1814 114. Question of the militia (1812-1814) 115. Secession movement in New England (1814) 116. Peace of Ghent (1812-1814) 117. Political effects of the war (1815). CHAPTER XI. SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC REORGANIZATION (1815-1824) 118. References 119. Conditions of national growth (1815) 120. The second United States Bank (1815) 121. Internal improvements (1806-1817) 122. The first protective tariff (1816) 123. Monroe's administration (1817-1825) 124. Territorial extension (1805-1819) 125. Judicial decisions (1812-1824) 126. The slavery question revived (1815-1820) 127. The Missouri Compromises (1818-1821) 128. Relations with Latin American States (1815-1823) 129. The Monroe Doctrine (1823). CHAPTER VI. 7 CHAPTER XII. ELEMENTS OF POLITICAL REORGANIZATION (1824-1829). 130. References 131. Political methods in 1824 132. The tariff of 1824 (1816-1824) 133. The election of 1824 134. The election of 1825 135. The Panama Congress (1825, 1826) 136. Internal improvements (1817-1829) 137. The Creek and Cherokee questions (1824-1829) 138. The tariff of abominations (1828) 139. Organized opposition to Adams (1825-1829) 140. The triumph of the people (1828). INDEX LIST OF MAPS. 1. Territorial Growth of the United States 2. English Colonies, 1763-1775 3. The United States, 1783 4 The United States, March 4, 1801 5. The United States, March 4, 1825 FORMATION OF THE UNION. 1750-1829 CHAPTER I. THE AMERICANS IN 1750 1. REFERENCES BIBLIOGRAPHIES R. G. Thwaites, Colonies, §§ 39, 74, 90; notes to Joseph Story, Commentaries, §§ 1-197; notes to H. C. Lodge, _Colonies, passim_; notes to Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History, V. chs. ii vi., Channing and Hart, Guide, §§ 130-133. HISTORICAL MAPS R. G. Thwaites, Colonies, Maps Nos. 1 and 4 (Epoch Maps, Nos. 1 and 4); G. P. Fisher Colonial Era, Maps Nos. 1 and 3; Labberton, Atlas, lxiii., B. A. Hinsdale, Old Northwest (republished from MacCoun's _Historical Geography_). GENERAL ACCOUNTS Joseph Story Commentaries, §§ 146-190; W. E. H. Lecky, England in the Eighteenth Century, II. 1-21, III. 267-305; T. W. Higginson, Larger History, ch. ix.; Edward Channing, The United States, 1765-1865 ch. i.; H. E. Scudder, _Men and Manners in America_; Hannis Taylor, English Constitution, Introduction, I.; H. C. Lodge, Colonies (chapters on social life); T. Pitkin, United States, I. 85-138, Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History, V. chs. ii vi.; R. Frothingham, Rise of the Republic, chs. i., iv.; Grahame, United States, III. 145-176. SPECIAL HISTORIES W. B. Weeden, Economic and Social History of New England, II. chs. xiv., xv.; G. E. Howard, Local Constitutional History, I. chs. ii., iii., vii ix.; C. F. Adams, History of Quincy, chs. iii xiv.; M. C. Tyler, History of American Literature, II.; Edward Channing, Town and County Government, and _Navigation Acts_; F. B. Dexter, _Estimates of Population_; C. F. Bishop, _Elections in the Colonies_; Wm. Hill, _First Stages of the Tariff Policy_; W. E. DuBois, _Suppression of the Slave Trade_; J. R. Brackett, Negro in Maryland. CHAPTER XII. 8 CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTS Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography (1706-1771); John Woolman Journal (1720-1772); George Whitefield, Journals (especially 1739); Kalm, Travels (1748-1749); Robert Rogers, Concise Account of North America (1765); A. Burnaby, Travels (1759-1760); Edmund Burke, _European Settlements in America_; William Douglass, _Summary_; the various colonial archives and documents Reprints in II. W. Preston, Documents Illustrative of American History (charters, etc.); New Jersey Archives, XI., XII., XVIII. (extracts from newspapers); American History Leaflets, No. 16; Library of American Literature, III.; American History told by Contemporaries, II. 2. COLONIAL GEOGRAPHY. [Sidenote: British America.] By the end of the eighteenth century the term "Americans" was commonly applied in England, and even the colonists themselves, to the English- speaking subjects of Great Britain inhabiting the continent of North America and the adjacent islands. The region thus occupied comprised the Bahamas, the Bermudas, Jamaica, and some smaller West Indian islands, Newfoundland, the outlying dependency of Belize, the territory of the great trading corporation known as the Hudson's Bay Company, and more important than all the rest the broad strip of territory running along the coast from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the Altamaha River. [Sidenote: Boundaries.] It is in this continental strip, lying between the sea and the main chain of the Appalachian range of mountains, that the formation of the Union was accomplished. The external boundaries of this important group of colonies were undetermined; the region west of the mountains was drained by tributaries of the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi rivers, and both these rivers were held in their lower course by the French. Four successive colonial wars had not yet settled the important question of the territorial rights of the two powers, and a fifth war was impending. So far as the individual colonies were concerned, their boundaries were established for them by English grants. The old charters of Massachusetts, Virginia, and the Carolinas had given title to strips of territory extending from the Atlantic westward to the Pacific. Those charters had lapsed, and the only colony in 1750 of which the jurisdiction exercised under the charter reached beyond the Appalachian mountains was Pennsylvania. The Connecticut grant had long since been ignored; the Pennsylvania limits included the strategic point where the Alleghany and Monongahela rivers unite to form the Ohio. Near this point began the final struggle between the English and the French colonies. The interior boundaries between colonies in 1750 were matters of frequent dispute and law-suits. Such questions were eventually brought to the decision of the English Privy Council, or remained to vex the new national government after the Revolution had begun. [Sidenote: The frontiers.] At this date, and indeed as late as the end of the Revolution, the continental colonies were all maritime. Each of them had sea-ports enjoying direct trade with Europe. The sea was the only national highway; the sea-front was easily defensible. Between contiguous colonies there was intercourse; but Nova Scotia, the last of the continental colonies to be established, was looked upon as a sort of outlyer, and its history has little connection with the history of the thirteen colonies farther south. The western frontier was a source of apprehension and of danger. In northern Maine, on the frontiers of New York, on the west and southwest, lived tribes of Indians, often disaffected, and sometimes hostile. Behind them lay the French, hereditary enemies of the colonists. The natural tendency of the English was to push their frontier westward into the Indian and French belt. 3. THE PEOPLE AND THEIR DISTRIBUTION. CHAPTER I. 9 [Sidenote: Population.] This westward movement was not occasioned by the pressure of population. All the colonies, except, perhaps, Rhode Island, New Jersey, and Delaware, had abundance of vacant and tillable land. The population in 1750 was about 1,370,000. It ranged from less than 5,000 in Georgia to 240,000 in Virginia. Several strains of non-English white races were included in these numbers. There were Dutch in New York, a few Swedes in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Germans in New York and Pennsylvania, Scotch Irish and Scotch Highlanders in the mountains of Pennsylvania and South Carolina, a few Huguenots, especially in the South, and a few Irish and Jews. All the rest of the whites were English or the descendants of English. A slow stream of immigration poured into the colonies, chiefly from England. Convicts were no longer deported to be sold as private servants; but redemptioners persons whose services were mortgaged for their passage were still abundant. Many years later, Washington writes to an agent inquiring about "buying a ship-load of Germans," that is, of redemptioners. There was another important race-element, the negroes, perhaps 220,000 in number; in South Carolina they far out-numbered the whites. A brisk trade was carried on in their importation, and probably ten thousand a year were brought into the country. This stream poured almost entirely into the Southern colonies. North of Maryland the number of blacks was not significant in proportion to the total population. A few Indians were scattered among the white settlements, but they were an alien community, and had no share in the development of the country. [Sidenote: Settlements.] [Sidenote: American character.] The population of 1,370,000 people occupied a space which in 1890 furnished homes for more than 25,000,000. The settlements as yet rested upon, or radiated from, the sea-coast and the watercourses; eight-tenths of the American people lived within easy reach of streams navigable to the sea. Settlements had crept up the Mohawk and Susquehanna valleys, but they were still in the midst of the wilderness. Within each colony the people had a feeling of common interest and brotherhood. Distant, outlying, and rebellious counties were infrequent. The Americans of 1750 were in character very like the frontiersmen of to-day, they were accustomed to hard work, but equally accustomed to abundance of food and to a rude comfort; they were tenacious of their rights, as became offshoots of the Anglo-Saxon race. In dealing with their Indian neighbors and their slaves they were masterful and relentless. In their relations with each other they were accustomed to observe the limitations of the law. In deference to the representatives of authority, in respect for precedent and for the observances of unwritten custom, they went beyond their descendants on the frontier. Circumstances in America have greatly changed in a century and a half: the type of American character has changed less. The quieter, longer-settled communities of that day are still fairly represented by such islands of undisturbed American life as Cape Cod and Cape Charles. The industrious and thriving built good houses, raised good crops, sent their surplus abroad and bought English goods with it, went to church, and discussed politics. In education, in refinement, in literature and art, most of the colonists had made about the same advance as the present farmers of Utah. The rude, restless energy of modern America was not yet awakened. 4. INHERITED INSTITUTIONS. [Sidenote: Sources of American government.] In comparison with other men of their time, the Americans were distinguished by the possession of new political and social ideas, which were destined to be the foundation of the American commonwealth. One of the strongest and most persistent elements in national development has been that inheritance of political traditions and usages which the new settlers brought with them. Among the more rigid sects of New England the example of the Hebrew theocracy, as set forth in the Scriptures, had great influence on government; they were even more powerfully affected by the ideas of the Christian commonwealth held by the Protestant theologians, and particularly by John Calvin. The residence of the Plymouth settlers in the Netherlands, and the later conquest of the Dutch colonies, had brought the Americans into contact with the singularly wise and free institutions of the Dutch. To some degree the colonial conception of government had been affected by the CHAPTER I. 10 [...]... all America felt the danger of parliamentary control, and the outrage upon the rights of their New England brethren [Sidenote: Declaration of Rights.] This feeling was voiced in the action of the Congress Early resolutions set forth approval of the action of Massachusetts Then came the preparation of a "Declaration of Rights" of the colonies, and of their grievances They declared that they were entitled... and on the other that they could not be taxed by a body in which they had no representation They complained of the Stamp Act, and no less of the amendments to the Acts of Trade, which, they said, would "render them unable to purchase the manufactures of Great Britain." In these memorials there is no threat of resistance, but the general attitude of the colonies showed that it was unsafe to push the matter... to be the intermediary for the fur-trade from the northwest They remained throughout the conflict for the most part neutral, but forced the contestants to carry on their wars east or south of them CHAPTER II 19 [Sidenote: English claims.] Southwest of the territory of the Iroquois lay the region of the upper Ohio and its tributaries, particularly the valleys of the Tennessee, the Muskingum, the Allegheny,... Writs of Assistance breathed into this nation the breath of life." The community was not conscious at the time that a new and startling doctrine had been put forth, or that loyalty to England was involved The arguments drawn from the rights of man and the supremacy of the charters were of a kind familiar to the colonists The real novelty was the bold application of these principles, the denial of the. .. Commonwealth of 1649, and the English Revolution of 1688 The chief source of the political institutions of the colonies was everywhere the institutions with which they were familiar at the time of the emigration from England It is not accurate to assert that American government is the offspring of English government It is nearer the truth to say that in the middle of the seventeenth century the Anglo-... accepted it The charter and proprietary colonies feared that they might lose the guaranty afforded by their existing grants The new union was to be established by Act of Parliament Of government by that body they knew little, and they had no disposition to increase the power of the Crown The town of Boston voted "to oppose any plan of union whereby they shall apprehend the Liberties and Priviledges of the. .. democracy of farmers [Sidenote: Powers of the colonies.] The gentlemen of the colonies were leaders; but if they accepted too many of the governor's favors or voted for too many of that officer's measures, they found themselves left out of the assemblies by their independent constituents The power over territory, the right to grant wild lands, was also peculiar to the New World, and led to a special set of. .. Indies and the insignificant islands of St Pierre and Miquelon in the Gulf of St Lawrence Thenceforward there were but two North American powers Spain had all the continent from the Isthmus of Panama to the Mississippi, and northward to the upper watershed of the Missouri, and she controlled both sides of the Mississippi at its mouth England had the eastern half of the continent from the Gulf to the Arctic... though the colonists had no love for them, they had no fear of them; and twelve years later, at the outbreak of the Revolution, they tried to establish political brotherhood with them The colonies were now free to expand westward, or would have been free, except for the resistance of the Western Indians gathered about the Upper Lakes In 1763 Pontiac organized them in the most formidable Indian movement of. .. &c.-"In Answer to the Earnest Desire of the Honourable House of Representatives-"Voted an Entire Satisfaction in the Town in the late Conduct of their Representatives in Endeavoring to preserve their Valuable Priviledges, And Pray their further Endeavors therein-"Voted That the Afair of Repairing of the Wharff leading to the North Battrey, be left with the Selectmen to do therein as they Judge best " . between the sea and the main chain of the Appalachian range of mountains, that the formation of the Union was accomplished. The external boundaries of this. claims.] Southwest of the territory of the Iroquois lay the region of the upper Ohio and its tributaries, particularly the valleys of the Tennessee, the Muskingum, the

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